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1 Chapter 20 Circuits
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2 1) Electric current and emf a)Potential difference and charge flow Battery produces potential difference causing flow of charge in conductor
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3 b) Current: I = q/ t ∆ q is charge that passes the surface in time ∆ t Units: C/s = ampere = A
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4 Drift velocity: average velocity of electrons ~ mm/s Signal velocity: speed of electric field = speed of light in the material ~10 8 m/s
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5 emf = electromotive force = maximum potential difference produced by a device Symbol: E emf is not a force, but it causes current to flow E is like gh c) Electromotive force, emf gravitational analogy for a circuit battery
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6 Symbol for a perfect seat of emf E V = E
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7 Real battery r R V < E in general Battery terminals E
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8 2) Ohm’s Law Ohm’s law: for some devices (conductors), I is proportional to V: I V Device I V V = IR R = Resistance = proportionality constant = V/I
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9 Current depends on voltage I V Device I V I VV I and on the device Resistance R = V / I, not necessarily constant
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10 Ohmic material obeys Ohm’s Law: R is constant R is a property of the device I V Device symbol:
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11 3) Resistivity Property of material; zero for superconductors For cylindrical conductor: R is proportional to L R is proportional to 1/A R is proportional to L / A Define resistivity as the proportionality constant a) Definition A L
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12 b) values Conductors: ~ 10 -8 m (Cu, Ag best) Semiconductors: ~ 1 - 10 3 m (Ge, Si) Insulators: ~ 10 11 - 10 16 m (rubber, mica)
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13 c) Temperature dependence Resistivity is linear with temperature: For metals, > 0 (resistance increases with temp) For semiconductors, < 0 (resistance decreases)
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14 d) Superconductors Below critical temp T c, –> 0 –Current flows in loop indefinitely –Quantum transitions not possible T c typically ~ 75 K (high Tc ceramics) (record is 138 K) Applications: MRI, MagLev trains
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15 4) Power and Energy Energy lost or gained by q is U qV Power: V I Units: (C/s)(J/C) = J/s = W Consumed energy = P t: [kW h] = (1000 W) (3600 s) = 3.6 MJ a) Power dissipated in a device
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16 b) Power dissipated in resistors V I V = IR
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17 6) AC/DC a) Direct (Constant) Current I V V t
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18 b) Alternating Current V I t V0V0 -V 0 V ac generator alternates polarity:
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19 Average voltage: zero t V0V0 -V 0 V t I0I0 -I 0 I Average current: zero Average power: For resistors
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20 6) Circuit wiring a) Basic circuit I E
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21 b) Ground One point may be referred to as ground I E The ground may be connected to “true” ground through water pipes, for example. I E =
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22 d) Open circuit E I c) Short circuit E
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23 f) Parallel connection e) Series connection same current I same voltage V
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24 7) Resistors in series For perfect conductors From Ohm’s law if
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25 In general, for series resistors, Find the current and the power through each resistor.
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26 Voltage divider V=10V R 1 =6 R 2 =4 Current is the same in both resistors I Voltages divide in proportion to R VoVo Output Voltage: V VoVo
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27 8) Resistors in parallel a) General case Conservation of charge Ohm’s Law if
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28 Equivalent resistance is smaller than either R 1 or R 2 Conductance adds In general, for parallel resistors, or
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29 conductance adds
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30 parallel connections in the home
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31 b) Special cases i) Equal resistance ii) Very unequal resistors (e.g. 1 and 1 M R P = the smaller value
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